EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) — Since 1917, the American Friends Service Committee has been working for peace and social justice.
The Quaker-founded organization has provided its services worldwide, and in 1977, brought its work to the U.S.-Mexico border.
As part of the San Diego-based U.S.-Mexico Border Program, the organization helps migrant and border communities with issues revolving around immigration, enforcement and human and civil rights.
In this episode of Border Report Live, correspondent Salvador Rivera speaks with Pedro Rios, director of AFSC’s U.S.-Mexico Border Program.
During the Biden administration, Rios and fellow organizations spent the better part of two years in an area of the border known as Whiskey 8, where thousands of migrants arrived and were held outdoors between the border wall.


Rios and volunteers set up tents and provided food, water and medical care to migrants, and they did it through the slats of the border wall.
Rios describes the undertaking of feeding countless migrants for such an extended time, and he shares some of the stories of people he met along the way.
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Join the award-winning Border Report team at borderreport.com for a daily, in-depth discussion about people living, working and migrating along the U.S.-Mexico border.
You can also watch past episodes of the Border Report Live, highlighting not only immigration and border security, but cartel violence in Mexico, border trade, politics and the U.S. and Mexico’s ongoing water dispute on the border.
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